RF2K34AXB–A grayscale of toadshade flower (Trillium sessile) in a garden
RF2M3N044–Black and white infrared image of Ancient oak woodland a former medieval royal hunting forest with living and remnants of sessile oak
RM2F54HB2–Inflorescence of the plant Threeblatt (Trillium Sessile)
RM2C2A032–Teasels in Surrey, England
RF2H5MEWY–Exposed barnacles on a rock at low tide near pools of salt water
RMDYP10G–Common houseleek (Sempervivum tectorum), illustration from Soviet encyclopedia, 1938
RMBK9NK7–Strophalosia Goldfussi Brachiopod
RM2AJ0F92–Outlines of zoology . colonyis continued into little cups (hydrothecse)enclosing the polyps (calyptoblastic). Thesehydrothecae are stalked in Campanularians,sessile in Sertularians and Plumularians.The free medusoids have their gonads placedin the course of the radial canals (Lepto-medusae), and are either ocellate or vesiculate.Examples:— Plumularia, with hydrothecse on oneside of the branches, and Sertularia,with hydrothecse on both sides of thebranches.-The Campanularian Obelia geniculataliberates the medusoid Obelia geni-culata.{b) Hydrocorallinas.—Colonial forms whichsuggest the Hydractin
RMTB2HYH–Historical graphic representation, corals, 19th Century, Historische, zeichnerische Darstellung, Korallen (korállion), sessile, koloniebildende Nesseltiere, 19. Jahrhundert, aus Meyers Konversations-Lexikon, 1889
RFPW9ABH–lone Sessile oak tree during blue hour, millarrochy bay, Balmaha, Loch Lomond and the Trossachs National park, stirllingshire, scotland, uk
RMEGE3MP–Sessile Oak tree canopy, black and white
RMTREYDX–An old oak tree planted in the 16th century during the passage of Henry the 4th through Bain-de-Bretagne
RMEHDBWD–The Capon Tree in winter. Jedburgh, Scotland. Monochrome
RMBD7YA7–galls on oak leaf
RMBXT1TD–Coed Dinorwic and the Snowdon Massif in winter. Black and White
RFRHJJHM–Twisted, Gnarly, Stunted Moss Covered Sessile Oak Trees (Quercus petraea) of Wistmans Wood. Dartmoor, Devon, UK.
RFT5YKT7–The Sessile Bellwort is a genus of Bellworts. The leaves are opposite or alternate arranged. There are fruit on stem node, vintage line drawing or eng
RMANHEWR–Sessile oak branches
RMPG2MH1–. The natural history of plants, their forms, growth, reproduction, and distribution;. Botany. 764 THE SUBDIVISIONS OF THE VEGETABLE KINGDOM. of a star. In the Cinchonaceae and Coffeaceae, the stipules are squamiform, and sometimes lacerated (see fig. 432 ^). In the CaprifoliaiceEe they are either very small and in the form of stalked glands, or else they are adnate to the base of the petiole, and have the appearance of being narrow sessile segments of the leaf. The cjrmose inflorescences may be contracted into glomerules and fascicles, in which case each is surrounded by an envelope of bracts
RF2M0XJ6Y–Black and white image of tree bark of ancient oak in woodland a former medieval royal hunting forest with living and remnants of sessile oak
RM2F4A1K5–Inflorescence of the plant Threeblatt (Trillium Sessile)
RFRTKRGP–Clown anemonefish (Amphiprion ocellaris) the most iconic fish of the coral reef
RMBKACDH–Pedunculate Oak or English oak, Sessile Oak or Durmast Oak
RM2AFREHK–. Lessons with plants. Suggestions for seeing and interpreting some of the common forms of vegetation. e same in all of them. The end of thepetiole is slightly expanded, but the insertion (asthe mode of attachment is called) may be saidto be ordinary. 120. Now compare the dahlia (Fig. 91). Herethe base of the petiole is dilated; and it willbe observed that in this particular case the basesof the two opposite petioles cohere, and thismay explain the ring-like leaf-scar of the dahliashown in Fig. 38. When two sessile , oppositeleaves cohere, they are said to be connate (Fig.106). 121. Sessile le
RMBXT20A–Coed Dinorwic and the Snowdon Massif in winter. Black and White
RFRHJXM4–Spiral Patter Carved into a Moss Covered Granite Boulder in Wistmans Wood. Fairytale Magic. Dartmoor, Devon, UK.
RFT5X530–A picture shows Trillium Sessile Plant. Flowers are red, purple and funnel-bell shaped. This flora is known for its strong smell. Leaves are flat, cir
RMPFXD2W–. The book of forestry. Forests and forestry. Fig. 13. Fig. 14* Fig. 13.—^Twig and stalked cone of Eastern hemlock. Fig. 14.—^Twig and sessile cone of Western hemlock. 193. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Moon, Frederick Franklin, 1880-1929. New York [etc. ] D. Appleton and Company
RFRTKRN9–Banggai cardinalfish (Pterapogon kauderni) original from Indonesia are endangered
RMBK9R14–Durmast Oak female bloom
RM2AGDWJT–. Outlines of zoology. glandular endostyle, and adorsal fold (Tunicates) or groove {Amphioxus), connectedanteriorly to the endostyle by means of a ciliated band. On the other hand, the Ascidians differ from the lanceletsin many ways, e.g. the sessile habit, the presence of thetest, of a heart, and of genital ducts; the absence of seg-mentation, of nephridia, and any trace of ccelom in theadult; the U-shaped alimentary canal; the power of budding,so common in sedentary animals; and the hermaphroditism. The detailed study of development yields similar seriesof facts — marked resemblances coupled
RFT5XDC8–A picture is showing Leafless Twig of Filbert. The illustration shows: a. shows the male catkins, b. shows the sessile female flowers, vintage line dr
RMPG1TXY–. The natural history of plants. Botany. 294 NATURAL HISTORY OF PLANTS. cells are biovulate, with or without a false partition between the two ovules of the same cell. Gynochthodes, of the Indian Archipelago, has also the same gynsecium, without the false partition between the two ovules in those named Tetralopha. The flowers are in axillary cymes, or in sessile- or shortly pedunculate glomerules; they are polygamous or her- maphrodite and closely resembling those of the Imantina section of the genus Morinda. Gruckshmiksia (fig. 277, 278) is included in this series because its ovarian organiza
RFRTKRHT–Clown anemonefish (Amphiprion ocellaris) the most iconic fish of the coral reef
RMBK9PM9–Durmast Oak fruit acorn
RM2AX4TRE–The elements of botany for beginners and for schools . Bellwort (Uvulai-ia perfoliata, Fig. 163) is a familiar illustration. Tlie lower and earlier leaves show it distinctly. Later, the plant is apt to produce some leaves merely clasping the stem by the sessile and heart-shaped base, and the latest may be merely sessile. So the series explains the peculiarity : 2g^ in the formation of the leaf the bases, meeting around the stem, grow together there. 159. Connate-perfoliate. Such are the upper leaves of true Honey-suckles. Here (Fig. 163) of the opposite and sessile leaves, some pairs,especiall
RFT60MAC–A branch of a small shrub or tree with crowded, simple, short-stalked or sessile leaves, flowers in close terminal clusters and a corolla with a slend
RMPG0D68–. Fossil plants : for students of botany and geology . Paleobotany. 134 LYCOPODIALES [CH. looked by Kidston who holds that the scars were produced by sessile cones,is that in LepidodendronVeltheimianum strobili were borne at the tips of slender branches; the same difficulty is presented by Bothrodendron (Fig. 213). It is unlikely that two types of strobili were produced on the same plant, particularly as the cone of L. Veltheimianum was heterosporous. The cones of certain species of Pinus remain attached to the tree for many years and their bases become embedded in the stem; this is particular
RFRTY6KM–Detail of a coral reef with fish swimming around
RM2AFR8Y5–. Lessons with plants. Suggestions for seeing and interpreting some of the common forms of vegetation. tulip(Fig. 138), and willows are composed of asingle straight column. The mustard and wil-low have a distinct style, but the hepatica andtulip differ in having none. That is, the stigmais often sessile on the ovary, from which we 140 LJESSONS WITS PLANTS conclude that while the ovary and stigma areessential to a pistil, the style is not. 154. In all the flowers which we have so far examined the styleis single; that is,there is only onestraight style on eachovary. In the apple,however (Fig. 13
RM2JCK8ET–sessile oak, a rameau floral, b étamine, grossie, c pistil, d rameau fructifère, e gland, entier et en coupe longitudinale, Quercus petraea, (botany book, 1898), Traubeneiche, a Blütenzweig. verkl., b Staubblattblüte, vergr., c Stempelblüte, d Fruchtzweig, e Eichel, ganz und im Längsschnitt, chêne rouvre, a rameau floral, b étamine, grossie, c pistil, d rameau fructifère, e gland, entier et en coupe longitudinale
RFT60330–Tabebuia Leucoxyla is flowering plant. Leaves are simple, with stalked or sessile Lepidote scales. The flower is yellow, pink in color, vintage line d
RMPG2XDY–. Our native trees and how to identify them; a popular study of their habits and their peculiarities. Trees. FORM AND STRUCTURE that a number of pistils are found entirely separate ; as a rule they grow together and the parts unite or coalesce. A single pistil consists of ovary, style and stigma. The Ovary is a hollow case which contains the ovules ; the Stig- ma is the upper part, usually flattened, which is covered by an adhesive secretion and which receives the pollen ; the Style connects the ovary and the stigma. It may be want- ing, the stigma is then said to be sessile. (Fig. 36.) The Ov
RM2ANF671–The encyclopdia britannica; a dictionary of arts, sciences, literature and general information . 36o BRACHIOPODA but the custom has continued to prevail among Eastern nationsto the present time, and many of the types that were commonin Europe in prehistoric times are still worn in central Asia. A treatise, DeArmillis Veterum, by Thomas Bartholinus, waspublished at Amsterdam in 1676. BRACHIOPODA, an important and well-defined but extremelyisolated class of invertebrates. The group may be defined asfollows: Sessile solitary Coelomata with bivalved shells usuallyof unequal size and arranged dorso
RM2JCK806–French oak, a Flowering branch of English oak (M male, W female inflorescence), b male inflorescence, c female flower, d fruiting branch of English oak and e of sessile oak, Quercus robur, (biology book, 1941), Stieleiche, a Blühender Zweig der Stieleiche (M männliche, W weibliche Blütenstände), b männlicher Blütenstand, c weibliche Blüte, d Fruchtstand der Stieleiche und e der Traubeneiche, chêne pédonculé,
RFT5Y4BT–Rabbit-Foot Clover is a flowering plant. Those leaves are divided into three sessile leaflets. The flowers are grouped in a dense inflorescence long a
RMPG41DW–. Our native trees and how to identify them : a popular study of their habits and their peculiarities . Trees. FORM AND STRUCTURE that a number of pistils are found entirely separate ; as a rule they grow together and the parts unite or coalesce. A single pistil consists of ovary, style and stigma. The Ovary is a hollow case which contains the ovules ; the Stig- ma is the upper part, usually flattened, which is covered by an adhesive secretion and which receives the pollen ; the Style connects the ovary and the stigma. It may be want- ing, the stigma is then said to be sessile. (Fig. 36.) The
RM2AJ045E–Outlines of zoology . r and lower marginals in contact; with skin-gills restricted to the dorsal (abactinal) surface; with broadambulacral plates; with prominent adambulacrals in the peri-stome, with pedicellarise sessile (if present), with two rows oftube-feet. e.g. Astropecten, Luidia, Porama, Asterina, Palniipes. Order II. Cryptozonia. ? With indistinct or rudimentary marginalplates in the adults, often with intermediate plates between the OPHIUROIDEA. 26i upper and lower marginals, with skin-gills not restricted to thedorsal (abactinal), surface, with narrow ambulacral plates, withambulacr
RMPG2E1E–. Trees and shrubs : an abridgment of the Arboretum et fruticetum britannicum : containing the hardy trees and schrubs of Britain, native and foreign, scientifically and popularly described : with their propagation, culture and uses and engravings of nearly all the species. Trees; Shrubs; Forests and forestry. 266 ARBORKTUM ET FRUTICETUM BRITANNICUM. Flowers almost sessile, solitary, or twin, rising from the scaly buds earlier than the leaves.—Tree, deciduous, beneath the middle size, and not of long duration. Persia. The peach and the nectarine are by some botanists made distinct species; but
RM2AFRK15–. Lessons with plants. Suggestions for seeing and interpreting some of the common forms of vegetation. Fio. 79.Virginia creeper. occurs in some plants (as in some of the vetches), inwhich the entire foliage is made up of large stipules. 88a. Some of the members in Fig. 63 are probably leaf-like stipules.A leaf which has no petiole is said to be sessile (». e., sittingJ, aterm applied to any member which is destitute of a stalk or stem. 89. How shall we define the parts in the leaf of 84 LESSONS WITH PLANTS the Virginia creeper (Fig. 79)? The petiole isplain; but shall we say that there are fiv
RMPFYT6X–. Fresh-water biology. Freshwater biology. 209 (210) Tentacles branched. Animals solitary, sessile, discoidal, or sub- spherical, with the surface of the integument indurated. Tentacles flexible, non-contractUe, finely perforate at their ex- tremities. Increasing by gemmation. Dendrocomeles Stein. Representative species. Dendrocomeles paradoxus Stein 1851. Tentacles equal in length to the diameter of the body, usually five or less in number. The distal terminations of the tentacles are capable of great expansion and, by means of these, other Protozoa are captured and the pro- toplasm of their
RM2AX2WA8–The elements of botany for beginners and for schools . SECTION 9.] ANTHERS. 101. Tetradymmoits, when, being only six, four of tliem surpass the othertwo, as in the Mustard-flower and all the Cruciferous family. Fig. 235. 286. The FUament is a kind of stalk to the anther, commonly slenderor thread-like: it is to the anther nearly what the petiole is to the blade ofa leaf. Therefore it is not an essential part. As a leaf may be withouta stalk, so the anther may be Sessile, or without a filament. 287. The Anther is the essential part of the stamen. It is a sort ofcase, filled with a fine powder,
RMPG1X0R–. The natural history of plants. Botany. Fig. 308. Male flower (|). Kg, 309. Longitudinal section of male flower. but they are attached by the edges and not by their mesial lines. The calyx is imbricate, like the petals which are persistent and grow around the base of the fruit., Melanorrhcea, consisting of trees from Malacca and Birmah, has also petals growing round the fruit; but this is a pedicellate drupe, and not sessile, like those of Swintonia, and the stamens are indefinite in number, sometimes considerable. Astronium is also very analogous to Swinhnia ; the insertion of the parts of t
RM2AFR3RH–. Lessons with plants. Suggestions for seeing and interpreting some of the common forms of vegetation. open again. 185. The sedges or carices are grass-like plantswhich grow in low places (although some of them DICLINOUS FLOWERS, CONTINUED 165 are dry-soil plants). ,They arevery common, and generally com-prise a large bulk of bog hay.They blossom in early spring.One of them is shown in Fig.165. The stamens are at a,for the anthers can be plainlydistinguished, and the pollendischarges freely. A dense,simple (that is, unbranched)inflorescence, in which the in-dividual flowers are sessile, orvery
RMPG2NFD–. Our native trees and how to identify them; a popular study of their habits and their peculiarities. Trees. FORM AND STRUCTURE that a number of pistils are found entirely separate ; as a rule they grow together and the parts unite or coalesce. A single pistil consists of ovary, style and stigma. The Ovary is a hollow case which contains the ovules ; the Stig- ma is the upper part, usually flattened, which is covered by an adhesive secretion and which receives the pollen ; the Style connects the ovary and the stigma. It may be want- ing, the stigma is then said to be sessile. (Fig. 36.) The Ov
RM2ANBXXR–The encyclopdia britannica; a dictionary of arts, sciences, literature and general information . A, leaf of Butterwort (Pinguicula vulgaris) with left margin in-flected over a row of small flies. (After Darwin.) B, glands fromsurface of leaf (X300) by which the sticky liquid is secreted and bymeans of which the products of digestion are absorbed. this way the plant obtains nitrogenous food by means of itsleaves. The leaves bear two sets of glands, the larger borne onusuaUy unicellular pedicels, the smaller almost sessile (fig. B).When a fly is captured, the viscid excretion becomes stronglyaci
RMPG2X86–. Our native trees and how to identify them; a popular study of their habits and their peculiarities. Trees. FORM AND STRUCTURE that a number of pistils are found entirely separate ; as a rule they grow together and the parts unite or coalesce. A single pistil consists of ovary, style and stigma. The Ovary is a hollow case which contains the ovules ; the Stig- ma is the upper part, usually flattened, which is covered by an adhesive secretion and which receives the pollen ; the Style connects the ovary and the stigma. It may be want- ing, the stigma is then said to be sessile. (Fig. 36.) The Ov
RM2ANHPJR–The development of the human body; a manual of human embryology . velopment there is no neck, the head beingpractically sessile. As development proceeds the innerupper portion of the shaft grows more rapidly than theouter portion, carrying the head away from the great tro-chanter and forming the neck of the bone. The acetabu-lum is shallower at birth than in the adult and cannotcontain more than half the head of the femur; conse-quently the articular portion of the head is much lessextensive than in the adult. POST-NATAL DEVELOPMENT. 517 It is a well-known fact that the new-born child habitu-a
RMPG4HHC–. Trees and shrubs : an abridgment of the Arboretum et fruticetum britannicum : containing the hardy trees and schrubs of Britain, native and foreign, scientifically and popularly described : with their propagation, culture and uses and engravings of nearly all the species. Trees; Shrubs; Forests and forestry. 936 ARBORETUM ET FRUTICETUM BRITANNICUM. male catkins are axillary and sessile; but have not the shining scales of the ATyrica Gale. The fruits are globose drupes, about the bigness of a grain of black pepper; covered with an unctuous substance as white as snow, which gives them the appe
RM2AG2RBK–. Natural history object lessons : a manual for teachers. Style. Ovary.• ??« E.eceptaole. •??• Stalk. Fig. 59.—Stamens and Pistil. Fig. 60.—Pistil. are arranged alternately with the sepals. The stamens 42 NA-TURAL HISTORY OBJECT LESSONS. are arranged within the petals, and alternate with them.Each stamen has a sac, called the anther, which holds apowdery substance called pollen. The anther may beeither sessile (without stalk), or supported on a stalk whichis called the filament. The pistil is the central organ,. Fig. 61.—Pistil of Five Carpels.
RMPG23H0–. A manual of weeds : with descriptions of all the most pernicious and troublesome plants in the United States and Canada, their habits of growth and distribution, with methods of control . Weeds. OHENOPODIAOEAE (GOOSEFOOT FAMILY) 109 branched, and very leafy. Leaves oblong to lance-shaped, one to three inches long, smooth, wavy-toothed or nearly entire, especially the upper ones, which are pointed at both ends and sessile or with very short petioles. Flowers in dense terminal and axil- lary spikes, intermixed with small leaves; calyx green, its five lobes completely enclosing the small, black
RM2AG2RP8–. Natural history object lessons : a manual for teachers. Fig. 57.—PollenGrain. Hollyhock. Fig. 58.—PoUenGrain. Phlox.. Style. Ovary.• ??« E.eceptaole. •??• Stalk. Fig. 59.—Stamens and Pistil. Fig. 60.—Pistil. are arranged alternately with the sepals. The stamens 42 NA-TURAL HISTORY OBJECT LESSONS. are arranged within the petals, and alternate with them.Each stamen has a sac, called the anther, which holds apowdery substance called pollen. The anther may beeither sessile (without stalk), or supported on a stalk whichis called the filament. The pistil is the central organ,
RMPG418W–. Plant life and plant uses; an elementary textbook, a foundation for the study of agriculture, domestic science or college botany. Botany. EXTERNAL CHARACTERISTICS 209 (See that right at the axils; such leaves are called sessile. Figure 72.) Sessile leaves often embrace the stems is, their blades extend some- what below the point of at- tachment ; such leaves are said to be clasping. This de- velopment of the bases of the leaf blades along the sides of the stem sometimes completely covers the stem. The leaves are then said to be sheathing. Corn is a plant whose leaf bases completely sheathe t
RM2AM8B6D–Trees and shrubs of Central Park . rays. At the second fork of this Walk, the path splitsright and left. Let us take the right hand or easterly.Not very far from the point of branching, you meet,on your right, a small, umbrella-shaped tree with leaveswhich reveal its kinship with the European ash. It isthe weeping variety of Fraxinus excelsior. Compareits leaves with the true European ash which stands inthe point of the next fork of the Walk. The compoundleaves are made up of from five to six pairs of leaf-lets, with an odd one at the end. These leaflets arealmost sessile (that is, stemless) o
RMPG2BFB–. Trees and shrubs : an abridgment of the Arboretum et fruticetum britannicum : containing the hardy trees and schrubs of Britain, native and foreign, scientifically and popularly described : with their propagation, culture and uses and engravings of nearly all the species. Trees; Shrubs; Forests and forestry. 520 ARBORETUM ET FRUTICETUM BRITANNICUM.. Spec. Char., ^c. Leaves lanceolate, or oblong-lanceolate, smooth, remotely or unequally serrated, cuneated at the base, and quite entire, glabrous. Branches tetragonally 2-edged, and also glabrous. Corymbs sessile. {Don's Mill.) A large shrub or
RM2AG2PY5–. Natural history object lessons : a manual for teachers. Fig. 62.—Section of Ovary. Saxifrage. Pig. 63.—Adherent Ovaryof Fuchi-ia. below and around which the stamens and floral envelopesare arranged ; it consists of one or more paits, called carpels(fruits), either separate or combined. A simple pistil (onecarpel) consists of a lower portion, the ovary, which includesthe omiles destined to become seeds ; and an upper part, thestigma, a hich is a portion of loose cellular tissue without anyskin covering. The stigma may be sessile on the ovary, orelevated on a stalk called the sti/le. In a com
RMPG2END–. Trees and shrubs : an abridgment of the Arboretum et fruticetum britannicum : containing the hardy trees and schrubs of Britain, native and foreign, scientifically and popularly described : with their propagation, culture and uses and engravings of nearly all the species. Trees; Shrubs; Forests and forestry. '214 ARBORETUM ET FRUTICETUM BRITANNICUM. Spec. Char., Sfc. Branches terete, twiggy. Leaves simple, and trifoliolate, sessile. Leaflets linear-oblong, and silky. Flowers in fascicles, disposed in long racemes. Legume 2-seeded, very villous. {Don's Mill.) An upright shrub ; evergreen, fro
RM2CEECA6–. The theory and practice of horticulture; or, An attempt to explain the chief operations of gardening upon physiological grounds. ve become de-veloped. It is towards the extremity of the shoots,where fruit-buds are yet in embryo, compact and sessile,like those represented by a, a, a, a, a, that we have tolook for a crop. Such buds retain their vitality tillthe following spring, if they are not killed by frost, orcut oflf by a badly-directed pruning-knife. The modeof bearing wHL thus be readily understood, and thenecessity of protecting the extremities of the shoots ofFigs from frost. Whenever
RMPG16P7–. Fossil plants : for students of botany and geology . Paleobotany. SPHENOPHYLLALES [CH. alternation of foliage leaves and sporophylls in Tmesipteris and in Lycopodium Selago. Another form of cone, also from the Middle Coal Measures, is referred by Kidston to Sphenophyllum trichomatosum Stur^ (fig. 113, B): this is characterised by the more horizontal position of the bracts, which " do not appear to be so much or so suddenly bent upwards in their distal portion as in some other species of Sphenophyllum" and by sessile sporangia borne singly on the upper face of each bract. A more rec
RM2CF2YFW–. The fern lover's companion; a guide for the Northeastern States and Canada. lade sessile or slightly stalked.Many botanists prefer to place this fern as a variety of thematricary, but others regard it as a form of Botrychiumsimplex. Borders of maple swamps, Vermont, NewHampshire, Massachusetts, and New York. (5) Common Grape Fern Botrychium. obliquum. Botrychium ternatum, var. obRquum Botrychium dissectum, var. obliquum Rootstock short, its base including the buds of suc-ceeding years. Fronds two to twehc inches or more high.Leafy or sterile segment triangular, ternate, long-petioled,springi
RMPG1W9P–. The natural history of plants. Botany. 470 NATURAL HISTORY OF PLANTS. Fuchsii ampliata. less fleshy, and petals sessile and contorted. In Skinnera^ formerly generically distinguished, the petals are small and sometimes even wanting. When they exist, they are either, as in Fuchsia proper,^ con- torted and contiguous, or expanded as in Eudiandra? The latter has, moreover, polygamous flowers. These variations have served to arrange in three different sections, the species, ahout forty in number, constituting the genus Fuchsia, which are shrubs or small delicate trees, sometimes sub- shrubby pla
RM2CE60NW–. American horticultural manual .. . g almost clearwhite when fully ripe, often with delicate blush; dots wliite, large,suffused; cavity deep, acute, russeted; stem short to medium, stout;basin medium deep, wavj-, narrow; cahx open; segments divergent.Core closed, irregular, .sessile; tul)e obtuselj^ conical; stamens l)asal;flesh white, coarse-grained, crisp, juicy, sprightl) subacid, good, verygood for cooking. October to December. 122 SYSTEMATIC POMOLOGY. Magog Red Streak.—Raised from seed by William AVarren, New-port, Aermont; tree thrifty, vigorous, upriglit, spreading, productive. Fruit m
RMPG2GDW–. Cyclopedia of American horticulture, comprising suggestions for cultivation of horticultural plants, descriptions of the species of fruits, vegetables, flowers, and ornamental plants sold in the United States and Canada, together with geographical and biographical sketches. Gardening. 51. Aeeratum conyzoides. AGEOPt'EUM (Greek for ftcM and wfccai). Graminece. Perennials or annuals, with leaf-blades flat or convo- lute : spike terminal, usually stiff; spikelets large, 3-8- fld., compressed, sessile at each joint of the simple spike, the side of the spikelet placed next the axis. Species about
RM2CE61J1–. American horticultural manual .. . round, small, clasping, sessile; cells obovate, slit; tube funnel-shaped; stamens median; seeds many, small, jilump, short; fleshyellowish, tender, juicy, fine-grained, mild aromatic subacid, almosts«cet, very good. November to February. Gano.—Origin, Missouri; a seedling of Ben Davis, much grown inits native .state. It may be described in Ijrief as a solid-colored BenDavis, the broad dark crimson splashes Ijeing lost in the depth of col-oring, and is a fruit of very attractive api:>earance. The Black BenDavis resembles Gano closely and for a time the tw
RMPG2EPP–. Class-book of botany : being outlines of the structure, physiology, and classification of plants ; with a flora of the United States and Canada . Botany; Botany; Botany. FLOWERING. V8 opposite leaves and meet around the fetem, each pair constitutes a ver- ticilaster or verticil, as in catmint, hoarhound. 363. How THESE MODES ABE MUTUALLY BELATED. All the forms of infloresoence above described may, after all, be shown to be but modifications of a single type, as follows : Let us commence with the spike, a slender rachis with sessile flowera Conceive that pedicels be developed for the flowers,
RMRDGA34–. The natural history of plants, their forms, growth, reproduction, and distribution;. Botany. 764 THE SUBDIVISIONS OF THE VEGETABLE KINGDOM. of a star. In the Cinchonaceae and Coffeaceae, the stipules are squamiform, and sometimes lacerated (see fig. 432 ^). In the CaprifoliaiceEe they are either very small and in the form of stalked glands, or else they are adnate to the base of the petiole, and have the appearance of being narrow sessile segments of the leaf. The cjrmose inflorescences may be contracted into glomerules and fascicles, in which case each is surrounded by an envelope of bracts
RMPG40YT–. Plant life and plant uses; an elementary textbook, a foundation for the study of agriculture, domestic science or college botany. Botany. MORE ABOUT POLLINATION 301 flowers are sessile. In addition to dandelion and daisy, the asters, the goldenrods, sunflowers, wild lettuce, thistle, burdock, and many other common weeds belong to the Composite. Though all Com- posites have their flowers in heads, not all plants with heads are Composite. White and red clover have their flowers in heads, and they belong to the pea family (Leguminosce). The buttonbush and the sycamore also bear their flowers in
RMRR234G–. A condensed botany;. Botany. THE FLOWER. 65. HEAD. 69. When flowers are sessile on a short and rounded peduncle, as in the Clover, the cluster is called a Head.. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Sewall, Joseph Addison, 1830-1917. Chicago, G. Sherwood & co
RMPG2BFF–. Trees and shrubs : an abridgment of the Arboretum et fruticetum britannicum : containing the hardy trees and schrubs of Britain, native and foreign, scientifically and popularly described : with their propagation, culture and uses and engravings of nearly all the species. Trees; Shrubs; Forests and forestry. Spec. Char., ^c. Leaves lanceolate, or oblong-lanceolate, smooth, remotely or unequally serrated, cuneated at the base, and quite entire, glabrous. Branches tetragonally 2-edged, and also glabrous. Corymbs sessile. {Don's Mill.) A large shrub or low tree. Virginia and Carolina, near the
RMRR234Y–. A condensed botany;. Botany. 64 SEWALI»'S BOTANY.. 68. When flowers are sessile on a common peduncle, as in the Mullein and Plantain, the cluster is called a Spike.. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Sewall, Joseph Addison, 1830-1917. Chicago, G. Sherwood & co
RMPG1WPD–. The natural history of plants. Botany. 16 NATURAL HISTORY OF PLANTS. Jifarumia muscosa. appendage situated above the insertion of the fikment; but this appendage is short and subulate; sometimes even it is almost entirely wanting. In these two genera the anther moreover is elongate, pointed, sessile or nearly so to the top of the filament and opens by an apical pore. Miconia has also given its name to a tribe (Miconiece) of this family. The flowers are 4-8-merous and the stamens, disposed in two verticils, are slightly unequal, but are most frequently inserted at two dif- ferent levels. They
RMRD8G7P–. The book of forestry. Forests and forestry. Fig. 13. Fig. 14* Fig. 13.—^Twig and stalked cone of Eastern hemlock. Fig. 14.—^Twig and sessile cone of Western hemlock. 193. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Moon, Frederick Franklin, 1880-1929. New York [etc. ] D. Appleton and Company
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